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01-26-1994 Council Agenda
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01-26-1994 Council Agenda
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for riparian residential lots for each <br />watercraft beyond six, consistent with the <br />following table: <br />Controlled Access Lot Frontage Requirements <br />Ratio of Lake Size <br />To Shore Length <br />(Acres /Mile) <br />Required Increase <br />In Frontage <br />(Percent) <br />Less than 100 25 <br />100 - 200 20 <br />201 - 300 15 <br />301 - 400 10 <br />Greater than 400 5 <br />c) They must be jointly owned by all purchasers <br />of lots in the subdivision or by all <br />purchasers of non - riparian lots in the <br />subdivision who are provided riparian access <br />rights on the access lot; and <br />d) Covenants or other equally effective legal <br />instruments must be developed that specify <br />which lot owners have authority to use the <br />access lot and what activities are allowed. <br />The activities may include watercraft <br />launching, loading, storage, beaching, <br />mooring, or docking. They must also include <br />other outdoor recreational activities that do <br />not significantly conflict with general public <br />use of the public water or the enjoyment of <br />noLmal property rights by adjacent property <br />owners. Examples of the non - significant <br />conflict activities include swimming, <br />sunbathing, or picnicking. The covenants must <br />limit the total number of vehicles allowed to <br />be parked and the total number of watercraft <br />allowed to be continuously moored, docked, or <br />stored over water, and must require <br />centralization of all common facilities and <br />activities in the most suitable locations on <br />the lot to minimize topographic and vegetation <br />alterations. They must also require all <br />parking areas, storage buildings, and other <br />facilities to be screened by vegetation or <br />topography as much as practical from view from <br />the public water, assuming Summer, leaf on <br />conditions. <br />30 <br />Page 57 <br />
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